Thanks for this video. I was having issues getting my bracketing photos to work properly recently. The issue was when you have steady shot ON while doing this some of the options won't take the number of photos that you want so I had to disable steady shot to get it to work properly.
If you're on a tripod. Turn steady shot off 100% of the time. There is no need for it and it could be detrimental to your bracketed photos if the steady shot compensates for any camera shake.
Thanks for the video. I found it extraordinarily helpful. I have notice that when do a Lightroom merge on all 5 photos, the default comes back fairly dark, and I have to a lot of tweaking to get the picture brighter (more than just increasing the exposure). Is there a setting that I could change to provide a bit more light, so as to save me more time fixing photos in post? thanks
Thank you for the settings! It would be amazing to get a look into how you do the post production, from taking a photo to create the HDR, and the edits. I shoot bracketing, but my windows still look so much brighter as it should, and have no clue on how to edit these.
I’ll be working on editing tutorials soon. However, I'd suggest outsourcing your photos. You should pay more than USD 1 for an image that looks amazing. If you have any questions, feel free to ask.
The in-body stabilization works to offset any minor camera shake from the shutter, which may slightly alter the composition of each photo in the bracket.
Hello there. Thx for the explanation. What about the resolution of the RAW files ? The test I've done with the full original RAW are giving me photos with an absurd weight, are you setting something special to get a lower resolution ?
You can shoot in compressed RAW. This will reduce the file size from 67 MB to 36 MB Approx per image. However, I shoot RAW, then I convert them to DNG in Adobe DNG converter. The file ends up about 1.5 MB per image. I will be doing a video on this process shortly. It is a game-changer for many apparent reasons. I hope this helps 👍